I decided to make my first shocking capacitor basicly and i took apart this flash for a camera that was seperate from the camera and it ran of 2aa's so i figured bigger spark ;D I took it outside and taped a screwdriver onto a wooden stick and wow that was one big spark and it left nice marks on the screwdriver, so i commenced to take another cap from a regular disposable camera and put it in parallel to the other cap and i ran the circuit off 4aa's (the circuit board has alot bigger and higher voltager rating parts than a regular kodak disposable camera. So i tested it out to see if it would start a fire so i put a leaf on top of it and touched it with a screwdriver on a stick and it launched the leaf like 2 feet away ;D, That was one bright spark, Has anyone else tried running one of the circuits with more batteries, Does it just make charging faster or make the spark bigger? Now im going to put like 5 cap together that should be fun

adding more batteries will most likely blow up the charging transformer, so i wouldn't do it too much. Just be fareful with hooking more than 2 of em up, THEN it becomes deadly! They are good for fun, but are not all that powerful when you think of what you can do

Well it was originaly made to run off 2aas so i think it should be fine, If you compare the transformer on it to the one of a normal camera it is about five times the size and all of the other omponets are alot bigger to.

I love capacitors... ;D I hooked up four 25v 2200uf capacitors in parallel and I like to cahrge it up in a battery charger, and then discharge it into pennies. I thought I remember a member on here selling huge capacitors for $10, maybe it was phaznox? Whoever it is if you see this messsage I want to buy one off of you!

Today I modified a flash capacitor slightly so I could just plug a cap in, let it charge, then pull it out and shock something with it. Then I put it in a project box and attached to a piece of pvc the size of the capacitors, and now I have an electro-blowgun! I've been testing it out on a piece of sheet metal, as soon as the cap hits it, sparks fly everywhere. It's awesome!

Today I modified a flash capacitor slightly so I could just plug a cap in, let it charge, then pull it out and shock something with it. Then I put it in a project box and attached to a piece of pvc the size of the capacitors, and now I have an electro-blowgun! I've been testing it out on a piece of sheet metal, as soon as the cap hits it, sparks fly everywhere. It's awesome!

That is a great idea! That's something you should do a video tutorial on and submit it to Metacafe and make some money off that!